For someone afraid of the dark, living in the Arctic is a severe test of courage. Young Jean-Paul Ardoin struggles to hide his fear of the dark and adapt to life in the Northwest Territories in the 1930s.
Jean-Paul and his parents had moved to the Northwest Territories of the Arctic for his father’s work – he was ten years old and loved the ice and cold and the absolute contrast to his home of Quebec. But Jean-Paul was afraid of the dark and with November to January having no sun at all, he wasn’t sure if leaving his light on at night would be enough.
Sasha was a husky puppy, the runt of the litter and Jean-Paul claimed her as his own. He also had an affliction which he’d been born with, and which caused him to limp. The Inuit boys at school teased him mercilessly and Jean-Paul was sad. But when they invited him to join their club, the Ice Patrol, he was excited – though suspicious, he was keen to have friends, and become one of them. But the initiation the three boys put him through – the darkness of the inside of an abandoned igloo, reported to be haunted – made Jean-Paul terribly afraid. And with the storm approaching, he didn’t know how he would get home…
The Haunted Igloo by Bonnie Turner is the first in the Arctic Series and I absolutely loved it! Sasha was adorable – loyal and kind – while Jean-Paul was a typical kid; desperate to have friends and mix in at school. Set in the 1930s in one of the coldest places on earth, The Haunted Igloo is one I have no hesitation in recommending.